Surgical Tool with Targeting Guidance
20230320800 · 2023-10-12
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61B2090/365
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B17/16
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B34/20
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B1/00165
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B90/37
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2017/00455
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B17/320016
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B34/70
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B17/1633
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61B34/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B90/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B34/20
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A powered surgical tool for a user to manipulate a desired tissue in surgical site within a patient may include a body having a tissue manipulation portion powerable and having a manipulation member for manipulating the desired tissue, and a projecting device with an exit port. The projecting device is powerable to emit an optical targeting marker from the exit port in a targeting direction onto the surgical site in a way that is operationally related to the operative direction and is visible to the user for providing information about at least one of a location and an orientation of the manipulation member and an operative direction within the surgical site. An imaging device may be provided to obtaining an image of the surgical site using an optical receiver attached to the body. The device may also measure and/or indicate distance to the surgical site.
Claims
1. A powered surgical tool for a user to manipulate a desired tissue in surgical site within a patient, the powered surgical tool comprising: a body including a main portion and a tissue manipulation portion, the tissue manipulation portion being powerable and having a manipulation member for manipulating the desired tissue, the body and the tissue manipulation portion being configured together so as to define an operative direction of the manipulation member relative to the surgical site, wherein the tissue manipulation member is powered and aligned in the operative direction to manipulate the desired tissue disposed along the operative direction; and a projecting device with an exit port, the projecting device being powerable to emit an optical targeting marker from the exit port in a targeting direction onto the surgical site, the exit port being located on the body so that the targeting direction is operationally related to the operative direction, wherein the optical targeting marker is visible to the user for providing information about at least one of a location and an orientation of the manipulation member within the surgical site and for providing information about at least one of a location and an orientation of the operative direction within the surgical site.
2. The powered surgical tool of claim 1, wherein the operative direction and the targeting direction are parallel.
3. The powered surgical tool of claim 2, wherein the body includes a central portion and a distal end extending in a distal direction from the central portion, and wherein the operative direction and the targeting direction extend in the distal direction.
4. The powered surgical tool of claim 2, wherein the body includes a central portion and a distal end extending in a distal direction from the central portion, and wherein the operative direction and the targeting direction extend in a lateral direction angled from the distal direction.
5. The powered surgical tool of claim 4, wherein the lateral direction is perpendicular to the distal direction.
6. The powered surgical tool of claim 1, wherein the projecting device includes an electrically-powered light source and the exit port includes a lens for directing light from the electrically-powered light source in a beam in a targeting direction to form the optical targeting marker.
7. The powered surgical tool of claim 6, further including an optical unit remote from the tool, the electrically-powered light source being located in the optical unit.
8. The powered surgical tool of claim 7, wherein the optical unit further includes a camera for receiving an image obtained of the surgical site.
9. The powered surgical tool of claim 1, wherein the exit port emits a light beam having parallel rays so that a size of the optical targeting marker is substantially unchanged regardless of a distance between the exit port and the optical targeting marker within the surgical site.
10. The powered surgical tool of claim 9, wherein the optical targeting marker includes at least one point.
11. The powered surgical tool of claim 9, wherein the optical targeting marker includes at least one line.
12. The powered surgical tool of claim 9, wherein the optical targeting marker is sized relative to the manipulation member so as to indicate the area within the surgical site that would be contacted by the manipulation member if moved in the operative direction to contact the desired tissue.
13. The powered surgical tool of claim 1, wherein the exit port emits a light beam having non-parallel rays centered around the targeting direction so that a size of the optical targeting marker changes depending on a distance between the exit port and the optical targeting marker within the surgical site.
14. The powered surgical tool of claim 1, wherein the exit port emits a light beam, and the tool includes a detector for electrooptical distancing to determine a distance between the exit port and the optical targeting marker within the surgical site.
15. The powered surgical tool of claim 14, wherein the detector includes a camera within or connected to an optical receiver.
16. The powered surgical tool of claim 1, wherein the projecting device is configured to emit at least two light beams from at least one exit port, the optical targeting marker including distinct portions created by each of the at least two light beams.
17. The powered surgical tool of claim 16, wherein two of the distinct portions are of different wavelengths in a visible spectrum.
18. The powered surgical tool of claim 16, wherein the distinct portions are spaced relative to the manipulation member so as to indicate the area within the surgical site that would be manipulated by the manipulation member if moved in the operative direction to contact the desired tissue.
19. The powered surgical tool of claim 16, wherein the at least one exit port is a single exit port configured to split the light into the at least two beams.
20. The powered surgical tool of claim 16, wherein the at least one exit port includes a plurality of exit ports, each of the exit ports being configured to emit one of the at least two beams.
21. The powered surgical tool of claim 1, further including at least one imaging device for obtaining an image of the surgical site.
22. The powered surgical tool of claim 21, wherein the at least one imaging device uses an optical receiver attached to the body for obtaining the image of the surgical site.
23. The powered surgical tool of claim 22, wherein the imaging device includes a camera for receiving the image from the optical receiver.
24. The powered surgical tool of claim 23, wherein the camera is located in an optical unit remote from the tool.
25. The powered surgical tool of claim 24, wherein the projecting device includes an electrically-powered light source and the exit port includes a lens for directing light from the electrically-powered light source in a beam in a targeting direction to form the optical targeting marker, the electrically powered light source being located in the optical unit.
26. The powered surgical tool of claim 22, including a plurality of the exit ports and a plurality of the optical receivers distributed about the tool.
27. The powered surgical tool of claim 22, wherein the at least one imaging device uses a plurality of the optical receivers, the images obtained by the optical receivers devices being complimentary to each other.
28. The powered surgical tool of claim 27, wherein the optical receivers are spaced from each other on the body.
29. The powered surgical tool of claim 21, wherein one of the imaging devices obtains an image including the optical targeting marker along the operative direction, and another of the imaging devices obtains an image directed differently from the operative direction.
30. The powered surgical tool of claim 21, wherein the at least one imaging device includes an optical receiver, and wherein the optical receiver is also the exit port of the projecting device.
31. The powered surgical tool of claim 1, further including positioning markings distributed on the body for identifying an orientation of the body by detecting positions of the positioning markings.
32. The powered surgical tool of claim 1, further including a display device for displaying an image providing the information about the at least one of the orientation of and the location of the manipulation member within the surgical site and for providing the information about the at least one of the location and the orientation of the operative direction within the surgical site.
33. The powered surgical tool of claim 32, wherein the image is a visual image of the surgical site.
34. The powered surgical tool of claim 33, wherein the image includes the optical targeting marker.
35. The powered surgical tool of claim 32, wherein the image includes a representation of the location and the orientation of the manipulation member relative to the desired tissue.
36. The powered surgical tool of claim 32, wherein the image is an augmented reality image.
37. The powered surgical tool of claim 1, wherein the manipulation member is one of a laser element, an ultrasonic element, an oscillating element, a rotary element, a thermal element, a radiofrequency element, an electrical element, an electromagnetic element, a magnetic element, a radiological element, a chemical element.
38. The powered surgical tool of claim 1, wherein the body includes a handle and a shield, the shield being located adjacent the manipulation member of the tissue manipulation portion and configured to at least partially surround a first part of the manipulation member so that the first part is precluded from contact with the surgical site, the shield configured so that a second part of the manipulation member is exposed for use in manipulating the desired tissue within the surgical site.
39. The powered surgical tool of claim 38, wherein the exit port is located on the shield.
40. The powered surgical tool of claim 39, wherein at least a distal portion of the shield is located on the body distally relative to the manipulation member and the handle, and the exit port is located on the distal portion of the shield.
41. The powered surgical tool of claim 38, wherein the projecting device is configured with two of the exit ports, one of the exit ports being located on the shield and another of the exit ports being located on the body spaced from the shield.
42. The powered surgical tool of claim 38, further including an imaging device with at least two optical receivers attached to the body for obtaining the image of the surgical site, at least one of the optical receivers being located on the shield and at least another of the optical receivers being located on the body spaced from the shield.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0044] Detailed reference will now be made to the drawings in which examples embodying the present disclosure are shown. The detailed description uses numeral and letter designations to refer to features in the drawings. Like or similar reference numerals in the drawings and description have been used to refer to like or similar parts of the disclosure.
[0045] The drawings and detailed description provide a full and enabling description of the disclosure and the manner and process of making and using it. Each embodiment is provided by way of explanation of the subject matter not limitation thereof. In fact, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations may be made to the disclosed subject matter without departing from the scope or spirit of the disclosure. For instance, features illustrated or described as part of one embodiment may be used with another embodiment to yield a still further embodiment
[0046] The present disclosure is directed generally to embodiments and aspects of powered surgical tools that can be used to perform a surgical procedure on a human or animal body. Examples discussed below are exemplary only and should not be considered limiting.
[0047] The examples discussed below integrate optical features onto the surgical tool, including one or more projecting devices and/or one or more imaging devices. The disclosed projecting devices are not mere illumination devices and are configured to assist with at least one of positioning the surgical tool, visualizing, and determining and/or indicating distances between the tool and the desired (targeted) tissue for manipulation, a surgical site, and/or a wound cavity. The disclosed imaging devices are configured to assist with the visualization. Certain aspects of the examples below provide visualization with first-person perspective from the viewpoint of the tissue manipulation members of the surgical tool. Other aspects provide projection of one or more targeting markers to guide the surgeon and assist with tool alignment, as well as determining and/or representing a distance between the tool's manipulation member and the tissue. Further aspects provide predetermined alignment indicia on the surgical tool to assist in determining the surgical tool's position and orientation. The tools may be used in medical or dental surgeries or procedures on any part of the human body by a medical/dental professional or an animal body by a veterinary professional. Reference to use by a “surgeon” herein, is for convenience only, and it should be understood that such user may be any sort of medical professional, such as a physician, dentist, oral surgeon, specialist, assistant, veterinarian, etc., with the powered surgical tool being configured for the particular use by such person, either directly, cooperatively, or robotically. Thus, the powered surgical tools described and claimed herein include without limitation any sort of powered tool used by any such person in any such procedure on a human or animal body. Other aspects of the disclosure are set forth below in detail and/or are listed in the following claims.
[0048]
[0049] As shown in
[0050] A tissue manipulation portion 30 is attached to body 22. If desired, manipulation portion 30 may be removably attachable via connecting portion 32 to central portion 24 of body. In such case, body 20 may be used with different types of manipulation members in a modular way, whether provided together as a kit or provided separately. Also, manipulation portion 30 may be removable for cleaning and reuse, or removable and disposed of in a single use embodiment.
[0051] As illustrated in
[0052] As illustrated, manipulation member 34 is a conventional mechanical, rotary grinder that destroys tissue by direct contact when in rotation. It should be understood that other types of manipulation members besides mechanical and/or rotary members could be employed in tool 20. Thus, as used herein, “manipulation” may be by any type of altering, cutting, removing, or destroying tissue in a desired area in a surgical site. Such tools may use contact structures (e.g., grinders, drills, ultrasound sonotrodes) or noncontact structures (e.g., lasers) to achieve such manipulation. Accordingly, besides tools employing rotary motion, tools employing oscillating motion, ultrasonic vibration, laser energy, electrical energy, electromagnetic energy, magnetic energy, radiofrequency energy, radiological energy, chemical energy or reactants, mechanical energy, and thermal energy may be utilized, with corresponding modifications or substitutions of elements in the manipulation portion, the manipulation member, the tool, and the surgical system in general. Power may be supplied by conventional electrical and/or pneumatic means. Thus, the illustration and description of an electrically-powered, mechanical, rotary manipulation portion in examples below is not intended to be limiting as to the scope of the invention.
[0053] Regardless of the type of tool and manipulation portion selected, body 22 and tissue manipulation portion 30 are configured together so as to define an operative direction of the manipulation member 34 relative to the surgical site S. For a distally located manipulation member such as member 34, the operative direction may be distal (along or parallel to central axis 36) and/or may be in a direction other than distal (at an angle to central axis 36, laterally (e.g., radially from) central axis 36, etc.), depending on the tool, the surgical procedure or a portion or step thereof, the surgeon preference, etc., As shown in
[0054] Tool 20 and/or its overall control system may include at least one projecting device with an exit port attached to body 22 to assist with properly positioning the tool 20 so as to contact the desired tissue (and only the desired tissue) within the surgical site. The projecting device(s) and their exit ports that can be employed with the tools disclosed herein can be of many designs, providing different functionality and benefits to the surgeon. In a most basic arrangement, the projecting device of the tools used herein can project one light beam out of one exit port to form one optical targeting marker that is essentially an illuminated “point” or “dot” where the light beam falls on the surgical site.
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[0058] As shown in
[0059] Cable 26c may also include separate portions (for example a portion from exit port 38 to an optical connector within tool 20, and another portion extending from the optical connector within tool 20 to optical unit 60). Such separable portions may be useful for example, where manipulation portion 30 on which exit port 38 is mounted is removable from the rest of tool 20.
[0060] As shown in
[0061] At least one projecting device 62 is provided within optical unit 60, and may include a laser diodes or LEDs with beam-shaping lenses, which are most suitable for high intensity beam projection, preferably emitting parallel beams. In conjunction with diffractive lenses, masks, filters, slits, and apertures, laser diodes and LEDs are further suitable for patterned beam projection, as well as matrix displays/AMOLED's. A reflective device (which may as described below be a beam splitter 64) may be provided to redirect light from projecting device 62 into a waveguide such as an optical fiber (e.g., within cable 26c) toward exit port 38 to be emitted onto the surgical site. Other focusing and directing arrangements could be used, including one without reflection off a beam splitter. In combination with lenses and apertures, the projecting devices can project radially shaped beams with a focus point in a fixed direction to further aid optical distance determination, as well as indicia or lines.
[0062] As shown in
[0063] When fiber optics are used, the optical system can include not only a projecting device but also an imaging device. In this case an imaging device 66 such as a camera, for example with an imaging CCD 68, can be included in the optical system, for example within optical unit 60. Use of such an imaging device 66 allows display of an observed image on screen 50, for example, obtained through an optical receiver or lens on tool 20, which may be exit port 38 co-located at the end of the projection device or which may be another lens (not shown) on tool 20.
[0064] As shown in
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[0066] As illustrated, projecting device exit port 38 is located on the body so that the light originally generated by the projecting device 62 is emitted in a targeting direction operationally related to the operative direction. For example, the projecting device may project a beam 42 that, when incident on the surgical site S, creates an optical targeting marker 40 (marked with a circle in the figures for clarity, but which may be one or more points, lines, characters, geometric shapes, or any desired visible indicia). The location of optical targeting marker 40 has some predetermined relationship to the orientation and/or position of manipulation member 34 of tool 20 due to the fixed location of the exit port 38 on the tool. By knowing the predetermined relationship, the surgeon thereby obtains information about the position and orientation of manipulation member relative to surgical site S.
[0067] For example, if desired, beam 42 may extend distally parallel to and spaced at a predetermined and known distance 44 (e.g., 1 cm) from central axis 36. Thus, optical targeting marker 40 would be located distance 44 from a location 46 (the center of which is marked with an X in the figures for clarity) where central axis 36 would contact surgical site S if tool 20 were moved in an operative direction 48 (see
[0068] The distance 44 (e.g., 1 cm, but others are suitable) is predetermined and would be made known to the surgeon during training. Thus, the skilled surgeon would understand that by first orienting tool 20 with optical targeting marker 40 on the surgical site S distance 44 (1 cm) above the desired contact location 46 (see
[0069] Optical targeting marker 40 may thus be noted by direct visual observation. However, the marker and surrounding site may also be captured by an imaging device such as a camera, endoscope, or the like (separate from tool 20 or onboard with tool 20) and displayed on a display device such as an electronic screen. Therefore, optical targeting marker 40 provides information about at least one of a location and an orientation of manipulation member 34 within the surgical site and/or information about at least one of a location and an orientation of the operative direction within the surgical site.
[0070] In the non-limiting example above, tool 20 uses a distal operative direction 48 (along central axis 36) and a parallel beam 42 (see
[0071] Also, beam 42 need not be projected parallel to the operative direction 48 or central axis 36.
[0072] Further, the beam emitted need not be a single beam, need not project as only a point, and need not project a static-sized optical targeting marker using only parallel beams of light.
[0073] It should be understood that in embodiments where multiple beams are being projected (whether from a single exit port or multiple exit ports), different beams may be made of different wavelengths of light, which can also provide information to a surgeon. Such beams can be created in different ways, for example, coupling into an optical fiber or waveguide two colors of light or a broad spectrum of light, then separating the colors using a wavelength-sensitive filter or beam splitter, or by using polarization of light and polarized filtering. Such color-differentiation can be applied to all embodiments disclosed herein where multiple beams are used.
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[0075] The beams generated by the device of
[0076] Although four such beams arranged 90 degrees apart are shown in
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[0082] The presence of shield 131 allows at least one exit port to be placed therein to project an optical targeting marker therefrom. As shown, two exit ports 138a,138b are located at or adjacent distal end 131a of shield, and two exit ports 138c,138d are located in a proximal area 131b. The four exit ports are located laterally around manipulation member 134 and emit four beams 142a,142b,142c,142d to create optical targeting markers 140a,140b,140c,140d. The beams extend parallel to operative direction 148 (leading to center target area contact point 146), the beams and the operative direction herein being perpendicular to central axis 136.
[0083] The surgical site and optical targeting markers may be visualized directly (
[0084] The optical receivers may be connected, for example, by optical fibers and waveguides to an optical unit having one or more CCDs, such as unit 60 noted above. If so, by use of triangulation of the location of a given point in the surgical site using two optical receivers of known position on the tool (for example by identifying pixels of CCDs impacted by an item viewed from two locations), a distance to the given point can be determined. Thus, distance to desired contact point 146 or one of the optical targeting markers 140a-140d can be determined using two optical receivers 158a,158b. The distance information can be provided to the surgeon indifferent ways, e.g., by screen readout, by augmented reality on a screen such as screen 150, etc.
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[0086] As illustrated and as described above, tool 20 may be connected to cables 26a-26c and conduits 28a,28b. The cables may be connected for example to elements within system 200, such as a power module 27a, a control module 27b, and an optical communication module 27c (which may comprise or include features of optical unit 60, as described above). The conduits may be connected to a surgical fluid supply 29a and suctioning device 29b for removing the fluid along with any material removed from the patient during the procedure. Each of the modules and fluid supply/removal are functionally controlled and/or powered by one or more controllers 202 (one is shown), within system 200. As schematically illustrated for simplicity, controller 202 may include or be connected to a central processing unit 204, a storage memory 206, programming and other stored data 208, and at least one input-output device 210 for turning on and controlling features and functions of tool 20, including the modules 27a-27c, the fluid supply removal 29a,29b, and the display 50.
[0087] It should be understood that several separate controllers may actually be supplied for controlling different portions of the tool and the overall surgical system. The controller or controllers need not be local to the tool; they may be at least partially remote (on-site) or remote (offsite), connected by conventional wired or wireless connections. The input-output device 210 may include manipulatable input devices such as buttons, triggers, switches, keyboards, keypads, touchscreens, microphones, etc., on the tool itself as well as on other devices within the system for controlling elements of the system. For output, items such as screens, lights, indicators, speakers, etc., can be provided to give the user feedback as to status of the tool, its components, or the procedure. One or more conventional power supplies (not shown) may be provided for powering the tool, the controller, and all other elements shown in
[0088] In use, surgical tools such as those discussed above having targeting and/or guidance features may be beneficially employed in surgeries characterized as “delicate” in terms of the tissue to be manipulated being in close vicinity of tissue which must not be disturbed or damaged, e.g., nerves, blood vessels, etc. Also, such devices may be beneficial for surgeries in which tissue to be manipulated is hard to reach and/or not directly observable, e.g., surgery on the vertebrae with an entry point on the back but with the surgery to be performed on the ventral side.
[0089] In using a such a tool during a surgery, for example the tool of
[0090] Upon approaching the surgical site and the to-be-avoided tissue, the approach would be guided mainly by the tool's camera/cameras using the targeting markers and any distance information provided on the screen. Thus, it is known how far or how close the tool and the manipulation member of the tool are from the targeted surgical site and the to-be-avoided areas.
[0091] When the surgical site is reached and in view from the tool, the tool would be fine aligned, especially the manipulation member towards the surgical site. The fine alignment can be checked by any distance information provided on the screen by electrooptical distance determination as well as information about the distances within the wound cavity which can be derived. When multiple target markers are used, which outline/edge the area of the working surface and this outline coincided with the area intended for surgery while avoiding any areas which are sensitive, the tool's working surface (manipulation member) would be switched on.
[0092] The tool, with the manipulation member switched on, is then moved carefully towards the surgical site, ensuring that the proper alignment is not lost during the approach and the main part of the surgical procedure begins, e.g., removal of tissue. Alignment information feedback is provided to the surgeon by the optical targeting markers, makers on the tool, and such during this movement so that desired alignment is maintained through contact. After a short contact, the tool may be moved back to observe the procedure's progress and the tool may be realigned, if desired for further contact with the target area or an adjacent target area, and then moved into contact. Such aligning and contacting may be repeated as many times as necessary until the procedure is concluded, for example, when the goal of the tissue manipulation is reached and confirmed by observation and/or measurement by electrooptical distance determination, either by reference to certain landmarks in the wound and/or the optical targeting markers and/or determination from provided information/images.
[0093] In the last phase of the surgical procedure, the tool would be retracted from the surgical site with the manipulation member switched off, essentially opposite from the steps in the first approach/insertion phase. During the extraction it is as paramount as during the insertion that the surgeon avoids contact with sensitive tissue and unwanted damage to tissue.
[0094] The surgical procedure can be used with image-guided-surgical methods, e.g., to complement the information form the targeting and imaging, especially the 1st-person view, with the positioning and alignment information provided by the 3rd-person information from image-guided-systems, e.g., X-ray, ultrasound, CT, MRI, positron emission tomography. This information can either be displayed in addition to the images from the tool, images from an endoscope observing the tool, on one split screen, multiple screens or combined with a virtual display, a virtual reality image and/or an augmented reality image. Alternatively, and additionally, the different views displayed may be chosen and switched between by the surgeon, depending on the preferred viewpoint for each phase of the surgical procedure.
[0095] The surgical procedure using the tools disclosed above can also be performed by a robot administered/controlled by a surgeon, who can choose the image/viewpoint before and during the procedure according to preference. Other support devices, like N-localizers, which help to improve precision and quality of the procedure, may also be employed.
[0096] Thus, the disclosed subject matter provides an easy to use and user-friendly device and system for assisting in surgical procedures by providing at least one optical targeting marker projected from a surgical tool. This disclosure is applicable to many different surgical tools and procedures, and the optical targeting markers can have many forms. Therefore, the disclosed concepts are not intended to be constrained to the application of any particular tool or procedure, or any number of or orientation of, optical targeting marker(s).
[0097] While preferred embodiments of the invention have been fully described above, it is to be understood that any and all equivalent realizations of the present invention are included within the scope and spirit thereof. Thus, the embodiments depicted are presented by way of example only and are not intended as limitations upon the present invention. Thus, while particular embodiments of the invention have been described and shown, it will be understood by those of ordinary skill in this art that the present invention is not limited thereto since many modifications can be made. Therefore, it is contemplated that any and all such embodiments are included in the present invention as may fall within the literal or equivalent scope of the appended claims.